These descriptions of farmhouse cheese types will help you identify what it is about your favourite cheeses that you like. Although the treatment for each type of cheese remains the same, cheeses made in each style will taste different due to the milk, and grazing conditions particular to that farm. Detailed description of the indevidual cheeses we supply are found on the cheese list.
These can range from mild to very tangy depending on the milk used. The curd is cut finely and moisture is removed during long maturing times – often years as in good cheddars. Most are cloth bound and left to mature in caves or ripening rooms developing character giving surface moulds
Supple and elastic.The curd is left to drain in moulds – the softer the cheese the less the curd is cut. To stop ‘nasty’ bacteria from forming on the surface due to high moisture and humidity, the cheese is dunked in brine and often rubbed in an alcoholic liquid. It produces a ‘sticky’ skin of bacteria that becomes part of the cheese. Developed by Trappist monks, it is an ancient technique and produces the “smelly” cheeses.
These have a high moisture content due to the fact that the whey is left to drain in moulds in a high humidity atmosphere. They are then turned and left to mature for a few weeks.The penicillin mould which then grows on the outside, helps to break down the curd and add to the overall texture and flavours of the cheese – usually luscious and creamy with subtle flavours.
The blue penicillium mould is added to the milk early on in the process, before the rennet. The curd in a blue cheese is crumbled to remove most of the whey. Left in a mould with a lid, they are turned frequently over one to two weeks to press out the moisture. When they are solid enough to stand they are rubbed in salt and left to mature in cellars or caves.The delicious flavoursome veins appear when rods are inserted into the cheese to let air in and the veins grow in the nooks and crannies in betweet the curds.
Click here to view and purchase our selection of fantastic cheeses.
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